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Circular
11-night Holiday - available only on Short
Break boats - Monday start (you need the extra day - don't try
this on Friday start)
Circular
14-night Holiday - available on any Out & Back Boat starting
Saturday, or Short
Break boat starting Monday
ROCHDALE CANAL &
HUDDERSFIELD NARROW CANAL
23. The South Pennine Ring
71 miles 197 locks 80 hours
This
exhilarating journey crosses the Pennines twice. You need to plan carefully so as arrive on time for
passages in three different places which you must book: Standedge
Tunnel, and Locks 66 to 83 and 36 to 37 on the Rochdale. This
trip is achievable in eleven nights (ten does not work), but
because you should allow some time for possible delays, it is
much more comfortable in a fortnight - which should leave you a
little spare time to visit the Peak Forest Canal.
Sail down the Calder & Hebble Navigation past Brighouse, with a
short river section to Cooper Bridge, where you take the right
turn into the bottom lock of the Huddersfield Broad. This leads
you up through the outskirts of Huddersfield right into the City
centre. Go through the University, a weird but satisfying
juxtaposition of sixties high-rise and nineties mill conversion,
then dive under another mill (this one real) into the first of
two new tunnels which lead directly into new locks. As you
emerge, a steel-truss railway viaduct frames the start of your
journey up the Colne valley into the hills.
At Slaithwaite the canal has been put back on its original
track. You will enjoy exploring the village. Then go on up the
valley, to the summit, 644’ 9” above sea level. Walk down to the
village of Marsden, whose Mechanics
Institute is the home of
Mikron Theatre
(though they will be away touring). The Standedge Visitor Centre gives an insight
into the lives of the tunnellers who blasted their way under the
Pennines, the packhorse teams who preceded them over the top,
and the leggers who took the boats through 3 ¼ miles of pitch
dark. The very short summit pool makes the entrance into
Standedge Tunnel all the more dramatic by its understatement.
BW will take pull your boat through the tunnel with an electric tug, while you ride in a
glass-sided passenger boat allowing you to see the work of the
original miners and of their modern successors. Your guide will
bring this to life.
After the tunnel, the canal descends quickly through the Diggle
flight, then into the Saddleworth villages, with weavers’
cottages, and genuine charm as well as craft shops. The centre
of Stalybridge has been transformed by the construction of a new
canal.
You enter Ashton by passing under an ASDA, to be compared with
the Sainsbury’s you passed at Huddersfield several days (and 74
locks) ago. Dukinfield Junction has perhaps the most graceful footbridge on the canals,
and there is an interesting Industrial Museum opposite.
The Ashton Canal takes you down, past the site of the
Commonwealth Games and the new on/off Super Casino, into Manchester. The city
is full of life and things to do, such as the Lowry and the
Bridgewater Hall (click
www.manchester.com for details of exhibitions and
concerts).
Next morning, meet BW for your supervised trip through the part
of the route with most potential for regeneration, now the canal
is open: a fascinating glimpse of inner-city life. Pass under a
vast interchange on the M60, and suddenly you're back in
greenery. Slattocks locks take you up to a good mooring.
Then it's through the canal's eponymous home town, past Clegg
Hall (a Grade 1 listed ruin), and time for another assault on the
Pennines. Take breath exploring Littleborough, or at the very
least its second-hand bookshop. Pass between tall mills with the
moors looming overhead, and arrive at the Summit - Inn to hand.
At the second lock down the other side, you're back in
Yorkshire, and after you go under a splendidly overdone Gothic
railway bridge, the Great Wall shows you are about to arrive in Todmorden: completely untouristy yet with much to enjoy -
fine Victorian buildings, especially the Town Hall, a lively
market and many places to eat and drink, all dominated by a
curving railway viaduct.
Pass down the valley, its sides closed in with crags and trees
and views of the moors high above. A stream runs alongside, and
the locks are set among woods or stone cottages. The Pennine Way
crosses at Callis, and soon you arrive in Hebden Bridge. This old
mill town nestles in a fork in the hills, houses piled tier upon
tier. Hebden has excellent shops and is full of surprises -
everything from horsey clothing to hand-made pottery.
On your home stretch now, the canal gradually descends through
woods, fields and small stone towns to the deepest lock in the
country, which brings you finally back to our basin.
Navigation notes: This journey
is recommended for experienced crews only. The Huddersfield and
western half of the Rochdale Canals are not yet in as good
condition as other canals and you may experience difficulty or
delays. Some of the locks can be hard work. Passage
through Standedge is available only on Wednesdays and Fridays
(which suit our start days),
and is free for the boat and up to 4
passengers. Extra passengers £6. Dogs are not allowed through
the tunnel, and must walk or take a taxi over the top. You should pre-book passage
with British Waterways (0113 281 6863). The Manchester end of the
Rochdale is subject to vandalism and your passage will be
supervised by BW. Passage between Locks 66 and 83 on the
Rochdale must be
pre-booked with British Waterways (01942 405700) and is
available only for a limited number of boats each morning
(except Sundays). Passage between Locks 36 and 37 (the summit)
must also be booked (7 days). We will
give further details in the Notes posted to you in good time
before your holiday. You must tell us at the time of booking
that you intend to do the South Pennine Ring. We will advise on
direction of travel and lock/tunnel booking. Not available on
Lincoln (slightly too wide!).
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Circular
21-night Holidays - available on any Out & Back or Short
Break boat
HUDDERSFIELD
NARROW CANAL &
LEEDS & LIVERPOOL CANAL
24. The Outer Pennine Ring
192 miles 248
locks 130 hours
Cross the Pennines twice, by the Huddersfield Narrow and the
Leeds & Liverpool. A demanding journey for real enthusiasts,
with an extraordinary variety of sights along the way.
For the first part of this journey, follow Route 23 to
Manchester.
Leave Manchester by dropping under a skyscraper and taking the
last nine locks of the Rochdale to Castlefield, junction with
the Bridgewater Canal. Pass the Trafford Centre and turn onto
the Leigh Branch. Go to Worsley, and stop to see the birthplace
of the canals. Transfer seamlessly to the other Leigh Branch
(you will have to look this up). This takes you through to
Wigan, where you join the L&L just above the bottom of the
famous flight. Pause to explore the covered market and bustling
town. Set out up the flight, with splendid views back over
the town. Then you are back in the country, with locks at
Johnson's Hill, where the Lancaster Canal never got joined to
the L&L. And so through countryside, with views of the Calder
Valley (that's the Lancashire Calder), interspersed with old
mill towns like Blackburn, you get to Burnley, and cross the
embankment above the rooftops of the town. By now you're getting
the message: the builders of the L&L were astonishingly bold, so
you aren't too surprised, having climbed the deep locks at
Barrowford, to see the long, wide and deep Foulridge Tunnel
ahead of you. You emerge into a pastoral scene, with your first
views of the Yorkshire Dales. After dropping through three
locks, you meander round the hillside on one of the most
isolated stretches of canal anywhere, an extraordinary step out
of modern life. Keep going through Bank Newton and Gargrave
flights, to arrive at Skipton, Gateway to the Dales. Pause to
explore the castle.
A long stretch along the hillside with smashing views and lots
of swing bridges - much easier these days - takes you to the top
of Bingley Five Rise. Now you get more activity, with several
staircase locks taking you down into Leeds, green nearly all the
way into the city centre. Huge investment is transforming Leeds:
you can visit the Royal Armouries, Harvey Nicholls and many
places to eat and drink.
Now you are on the Aire and Calder, a big navigation with
electric locks: you may see some commercial traffic. This takes
you round to Wakefield, where you join the Calder & Hebble
Navigation. This gradually leads you up the valley, the locks
getting shorter and the lock houses smaller as you go. Your
route passes in and out of the river, and has a charm of its
own. Finally the Pennines come into view again, and you know you
are nearly back in Sowerby Bridge.
Navigation notes: Previous
experience essential. You can make this journey in either
direction, depending on your start day. See Route 23 for information.
This trip cannot possibly be done in less than two and a half
weeks, however good the crew. BW advise doing the Wigan flight
in one go, starting early.
Not available on Lincoln (slightly too wide!).
ROCHDALE CANAL &
LEEDS & LIVERPOOL CANAL
25. The Northern Pennine Ring 185 miles
215 locks 115 hours
Cross the Pennines twice, by the Rochdale and the Leeds &
Liverpool. A shorter but equally demanding alternative to Route
24 with
wide locks all the way.
Follow the Rochdale from Sowerby Bridge to Manchester, then take
up Route 24 to bring you via the Bridgewater to the L&L.
Navigation notes: Previous
experience essential. You can make this journey in either
direction, depending on your start day. See Route 23 for information.
This trip can be done in two weeks by very active, organised
crews. |

Barrowford, L&L, Routes 24, 25 |